GUADEC
Posted by rbultje at May 29th, 2005
I’m at GUADEC in Stuttgart, as are hundreds of other GNOME lovers. For those not here, there’s video streams available from Fluendo (I didn’t see those mentioned yet anywhere).
Posted by rbultje at May 29th, 2005
I’m at GUADEC in Stuttgart, as are hundreds of other GNOME lovers. For those not here, there’s video streams available from Fluendo (I didn’t see those mentioned yet anywhere).
Posted by rbultje at May 15th, 2005
LUG-radio live
This must be one of the best ideas I’ve seen in the past few years (and thus deserves a mention). Nothing fancy, just beer. I’m imagining this huge lawn with ice cream bars (where sweet girls serve beer; don’t ask) and nice music, I must suffer from Woodstock-fever or so. Who of the Dutch Gnomeys wants to join me? If there’s enough, I’ll go!
Poor Uraeus; he gets a mention on slashdot, but they misspelled his name:
“The day long event includes speakers such as Ian Bell (co-creator of Elite), Simon Willison, Bill Thompson, Christan Schaller and more.”
Posted by rbultje at May 8th, 2005
Using 32-bit binaries in 64-bit mode on x86-64
So, I get that question a lot lately: can I use PitfDLL in 64-bit mode on my AMD-64?
The simplest answer I can give is: I don’t know. I’m not at all into this 64-bit thing and don’t want to worry about it too much. I’m sure there’s interested 64-bit hackers that can correct me on all wrong assumptions I’m making below and who are willing to code it, too. But that said, it’s probably possible.
That said, I cannot code this, I don’t have 64-bit hardware.
Totem playing
I wrote a new volume widget for Totem, which takes less space than the current one and looks more like other similar volume widgets on the GNOME desktop (i.e. a button with a volume icon on it rather than a largish slider). Nothing new here, you’d say. Well, the nice detail is that you still have press-and-drag behaviour, i.e. you can click the volume button and the popped-up slider will directly have grip/focus. Other apps, such as Rhythmbox, may be interested in trying this as well.
Posted by rbultje at May 3rd, 2005
Southpark hype
Most hypes suck. This one is cool. This is me. And this is me interpreted by a friend of mine. Or something… :-).
GStreamer’s fun
So, Thomas and Benjamin touched upon some of the difficulties in getting GStreamer 0.9 rolling. This is a difficult topic, not in the least because on the one hand, I’m indefinitely thankful to Fluendo for paying me so I can work on GNOME all the time, but on the other hand, I have seen some issues in this process so far, too. It doesn’t make the topic any easier, though.
The truth is, we indeed face issues.
Right now, though, it appears that most of the design is very flaky and subject to change. That’s both crap (because we agreed on working stuff already, or at least supposedly) but also good (because now we get to improve it). I try to make the best of it, giving feedback on proposals and the like.
Some parts of the process annoy me, though. Some are because of earthwaves and cannot be blamed on anyone, and most aren’t even targetting specific persons or companies. However, they are very tough issues that I don’t like talking about, but they are feelings nevertheless, and have to be said:
Christian and Thomas asked for more comments on and help with Wim’s work. I’d love to, and I would do so even more than I do now, if only it was fun. Keep it fun for me. Stop talking, just let me (us) do it.
That said, GStreamer is still a lot of fun, even if only because of the many thankful emails I get from users telling me (or Bastien) how happy they are with Totem and its continuously improving media support. Thank you, you make my day. As always, the next version will blow your eyes out with support for ALAC (via gst-ffmpeg), QDM2/WMV9 (via PitfDLL) and a lot more.
Discussionless work
GNOME-media is slowly but steadily advancing without endless discussions. Right now, we’re down to 60 bugs alltogether, or 20 if I omit gnome-cd (which I still plan to ditch at some point in the near future) and all enhancements (which aren’t bugs). Explicit thanks for this goes to Nirmal and Madhan, who did some excellent work on this while doing their internships, although many other contributors also deserve thanks. Like in the previous cycles, I’m positively confident that GNOME 2.12 will feature a more enjoyable user experience than 2.10, which was pretty good already.
Totem, too, is getting nicer and nicer. While GStreamer is slowly finishing complete DVD playback support (including language support (finished), DVD subtitles (half-finished, patches in bugzilla) and menus (in progress), Totem itself is getting more and more finetuning, too. This flower has some serious power.